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Constantly fantasizing about writing for us? You can still be a good person if you'd just get therapy here.
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Latest @th3j35t3r tweets
@Th3_D0c70R #PRISM is nothing new. All Snowden did was put a name to it. It's just a natural progression of SIGINT. Nobody's targeting YOU.
@clinch9 You do realize you can change the style of every shirt to a cheaper one to suit your pocket right, it's very customizable.
Topics!
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Nexus HTC One
In an unexpected move, Google announced a “Google Edition” Samsung Galaxy S4 at their IO event. This would be a streamline version of the device running only android, no UI overlays or enhancements. Before the news could full set in, wishes and rumors of a HTC One version started to fly. Low and behold, the HTC One Google Edition!
The HTC One will get almost the same treatment as the SG4, it will be SIM unlocked, bootloader unlocked and the 32BG version of the phone. However, the HTC One Google Edition will still feature the Beats By Dre software, which is not a bad thing at all. You can expect it to receive updates hot off the press from Google as well, which is a win! Priced at $599, it’ll be available on the Google Play store June 26th.
3 comments » | Android
BIKESPIKE GPS BIKE TRACKER
Good news hipsters, should your 3 inch thick bike chain fail to do its job and a would be thief makes off with your bike, all is not lost! With Bikespike, you have the ability to track that thing down like a stolen iphone! What makes the Bikespike super dope is its ability to stay hidden in the cup holder! How dope is that?! Check out the short video below!
The BikeSpike from Bike Spike on Vimeo.
Comments Off | General
XReader for Windows 8: Finally
I have been patiently (bullshit, I am as anxious as a cat in a room full of rocking chairs) waiting for Weave, the excellent Windows Phone news reader to make it’s way to Windows 8 desktop. They have promised some collaboration with Lazy Worm and maybe an app in June. But I have heard things like this before.
You see, I am somewhat addicted to Weave. It has become my go to source for everything newsworthy. Yeah, I have the CNN and Fox apps on my phone. And ABC, CNN, NBC, USA Today, TNW, etc. on my Win 8 devices, but they all lack something. And one big something is having everything worth reading in one place.
Continue reading more »
4 comments » | Reviews, Top News, Windows Tablets
YummyPets: Yup, Its For Your Pet
So you’ve heard all the rage about YummyPets, or not, and you’re wondering to yourself, exactly what is this “YummyPets.” Simply put, it’s Facebook for your Pets. That’s right, a social network for animals. The idea behind YummyPets is to encourage and build large comminutes from the ground up surround your favorite animal kingdom buddies. Simple, right?
Although nothing new, where YummyPets stands out is it’s beautiful yet functional layout, it feels instantly familiar! I’m sure that does wonders for the pet owners across the world waiting to be addicted to something else other than their current social feeds. You can upload photos, like photos, or… as YummyPets would have it… Yummy photos, comment and even send messages. The whole social networking deal is here!
So what’s the catch? Well, it started out in France and has now expanded to the UK, so there is no US version as yet. But, if this takes off like I think it will, you and your youtube start cat will be on YummyPets in no time! Hang in there!
Comments Off | General
Gmail gets a bit more awesome
Google has been on a hell of a roll lately, and from the looks of this new Gmail update, it looks like they’ll be slowing down no time soon. Attempts to tidy up your inbox, or at least bring some sort of calm to it, is not new. But this time around, the “tabs” concept introduced here really does have some potential to be something special.
Google and their brilliance device to add some not so easy to miss tabs to your inbox, pretty much categorizing things as they come. The first is “Primary,” which offers the same old view you’re used to, followed by “social,” where you get your twitter, facebook and G+ messages. “Promotions” where you’d get your daily email blasts from different sources, “updates,” where you get your bills and such. And lastly “forums,” this one is self explanatory.
So what’s the big deal? Not only does this do wonders for you on the browser, but the tabs carry over to Android and iOS, so life gets a bit more organized there as well. I’ve done a good job at managing my mail from the jump, so I won’t necessarily be using these too often, but it is nice to know there is an extra “view” available when needed. Nice! Check out the video below.
Comments Off | Android, General, iOS, Youtube clips
Office 365 Just Passed 1 Million Subscribers. Oh my!
Microsoft Office 365 passed 1m subscribers in just over 100 days, making it the best-selling Office yet. And for those that have problems with math, that’s a pptential 5 million users. Source: The Next Web
1 comment » | 140
Youtube Hack for the Lazy
Found this on the Google Operating System blog over here (which includes instructions to revert and is also an awesome site), a tip from Yu-Hsuan Lin hailin’ out of Taiwan. The steps: Log into Youtube (on your computer). Open your browser’s developer console (on Chrome, Ctrl+Shift+J, on IE press F12 and hit Console, Firefox Ctrl+Shift+K). Dump the code below into the console and hit enter (be cool, it’s legit), then close the console and the Play button should be to the right of the Youtube logo:
document.cookie=”VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE=LVXsOMb_c_g; path=/; domain=.youtube.com”;window.location.reload();
But how did this Taiwanese chap figure that out? Well, he’s a card magician, so I guess luck is his specialty.
Comments Off | Cool stuff, Youtube clips
Google’s Matt Cutts Takes a Lot of Heat
“The best place to hide a body is page 2 of Google,” they say.
There are plenty of math guys and possibly gals behind the constant tuning of Google Search to produce most relevant to your interests, combatting spam and SEO tricksters. It’s a complicated interminable game and in order to play for Google’s team, Bing’s as well, you have to be a genius as Matt Cutts’s academic accolades affirm. Among his less-mathematic duties at Google is being a spokesman for Google Search or, more accurately, a lightening rod to all the people Google Search pisses off which it does all the time. I’d wager as a human proxy to Google Search’s evolution he is the direct object of the greatest volume of anti-Google rage.

Google regularly, almost constantly, and mostly mysteriously, refines how its search engines weighs relevance of content it finds against what people searching for things search for. Let’s say you’re a big store like JCPenney, you pay some company that says it can get you ranked higher on search returns for clothing, that company does some tricks that artificially elevate JCPenney on Google search returns (SERPs), then Matt Cutts, his team and others at Google implement an update they’d been working on to hunt for the tricks this company was using and punish websites using them accordingly by either lowering their rank or knocking them off altogether. The intended result is a better web for you, not necessarily for JCPenney. And for businesses in general, the blacklisting of JCPenney might, for instance, incidentally benefit Macy’s and other competitors that absorb would-be JCPenney’s traffic. And of course the blacklisting of JCPenney surely made some people angry, and when those people were angry, other than maybe Schmidt’s, the face they most commonly had in mind with flames underneath was that of Matt Cutts. Somehow even in spite of this guys like Amit Singhal manage to duck away from this spotlight. Matt just has some je ne sais quoi to him I guess (that’s French for he has a sweetly vulnerable twinkle to his smile).
So it is these subtle and mostly-secret mathematical modifications that earned Google a title as the kingmaker. In defense of the negative connotations that title carries, Eric Schmidt noted to senators that Google’s primary goal is to improve Search for the users; and yes, while they may one day take traffic away from one business, that’s traffic another business gets, or businesses plural. Invariably, while I’d wager these changes tend to benefit the world, they do sting when you’re running a site that is not spam, doesn’t violate any of Google’s guidelines, you’re not link farming, you’re not doing anything wrong, but you wake up one day and you’re knocked off page one and the people suddenly above you look like garbage sites. What might you do? Go to Matt Cutts’s blog, check if he posted anything about an update, go on his most recent post and vent your indignation at him, a lot of which he fields, a lot of which he probably takes into consideration when working more on the math for the next update.
Were you just to skim through Matt’s blog’s comment threads over the years you might get the impression that the man is utterly incompetent and driving the Internet into the ground. We, here, suspect we’ve been on the receiving end of painful math from Google (though I’ve argued that they’ve been overly-generous to us and have since been correcting that). However, given that there are about as many losers as winners of websites in SERP changes from these updates, you will always have a large collection of folks who feel they were hurt unjustly. It’s not really human nature to get smashed by Google overnight and wake up to discover the damage and give Google the benefit of the doubt that they probably did the right thing, or are still on their quest in that direction. That’s not what people tend to do – many of them either call their lawyer or they go bash Matt either on the web or do something nasty to him in effigy.
Another thing Matt does which, if you’re involved somehow in websites, you may find very helpful is offer tips to the web both to make it communicate with Google and other search engines effectively and also to just make better sites for the sake of your own visitors. I’d encourage you to check that out on the Google Webmasters Youtube channel and to subscribe to the Webmaster Central blog. Actually we should probably catch up on that stuff ourselves…
Doug Simmons
Comments Off | Editorials, Google Code, Youtube clips
Nokia working on light-field cameras for Lumia phones
There were some indications a few months back to point to Nokia’s interest in light-field camera technology, now we’ve got a pretty interesting statement from the CEO:
So what is light-field photography? When an image is taken, the camera captures the most data it possibly can, weather asked to do so or not. The main reason for this is to allow you to change your point of focus and other corrections after the image has been taken. As you could image, this could lead to the perfect shot every time!
Still no word on when we’ll see the feature make it to market, or if it’ll arrive on the much anticipated 41mp monster Nokia has on the horizon! One thing is for sure, Nokia has put Windows Phone on top when it comes to mobile photography, and that’s not a bad place to be!
Comments Off | Windows Phone
I Use Google Maps and Waze in Tandem
Google Maps Navigation is my Old Faithful. It’s polished and given its popularity my guess is that it has better and fresher traffic and road information than anything. Also the voice is pleasant. It’s just polished, you know? Got the top notch voice recognition, layers, street view, screen diming, it’s damn good. Also Google does a super job caching for offline use, but I can live without that capability for most of my days. Waze is crude, but it’s utilitarian. But Waze gives you more information, namely obstacles, cops and now gas prices. And when driving by a marked speed trap and it turns out there is indeed a cop there, you can take your eyes off the road and sort of jam your thigh into the wheel so that you can type the guy who originally marked it a thank you.
Waze may not have as much crowdsourced traffic information to go on, yet it seems, much more so than Google Maps, to make aggressively liberal routing and rerouting decisions which in my experience seem to work out. Yesterday with Google, for some reason Google aimed me down from Connecticut to NYC down a two hour path. I hit the thing that gives you alternate routes and it produced an alternative that would have, according to Google, taken half the time. Why it didn’t give it to me in the first place I don’t know, not to mention why it might not have changed course later on. In contrast, Waze took the road not taken and I got there on time. And I get a speedometer. They both do a decent job guessing my intended destination when starting, though Google a little better in my experience. Furthermore, Waze’s ETAs seem more accurate than Google’s. I don’t know why, perhaps because Google feels it has to go by speed limits whereas Waze either goes by average flow-of-traffic speeds or maybe it builds a profile on how fast you tend to drive – I don’t know, but they tend to be on point more than Google.
But in Waze, traffic indication in its UI is not so intuitive. Sometimes it’s red, sometimes you just see a stack of little traffic icons Wazers recently made, it’s kind of amateurish. Sometimes it puts in live-looking speed indicators of various points in a traffic jam, but those tend to be pretty inaccurate. But Google produces a nice clean line from green to black that anyone could understand without explanation and again because of the relatively greater volume of users it has and whatever other means it uses to aggregate traffic patterns that data tends to be impressively precise. Also, Waze’s voice ain’t pretty. Muted..
So what’s a fella to do? Run both is what I do, Google generally in the background, unzoomed a bit so I can see traffic down a good distance, then flipped to Waze up front, sound off. When Waze aims me toward an unorthodox turn, I can hear whether or not Google disagrees, then make my own judgment call. When I’m running into a traffic jam, I can flip over to Google to see how bad it is. When I’m not in traffic, Waze gives me an edge with the law enforcement information which is surprisingly more accurate than you might think, at least on trafficked routes. And when I’m stopped, Waze gives me helpful information on hot deals at a nearby Taco Bell. Waze works on Android, iOS, Windows Mobile, Symbian and it may be coming to Windows Phone. Perhaps this tandem strategy would be better on BBOS10 with that split screen thing? Ehh.
So I’m hearing that Google and Facebook may be in some sort of bidding war to buy Waze. This makes me nervous as Google has a pesky habit of buying operations I like apparently to just shut them down or put them on ice for good. In this case, maybe Google has no interest in Waze in its separate form but somehow blending in whatever it offers that Google Maps doesn’t that Google wants into Google Maps. That’s bad for me because there’s no way Google Maps would, like Apple Maps (which has a deal with Waze) doesn’t, give me tips like the speed traps. They would get rid of the clutter. What interest could Google have in Waze, any interest that’s in my interests? I can’t think of any. Facebook maybe, but Google? It just makes me nervous.
Doug Simmons
3 comments » | Android, Editorials, Reviews, Windows Phone
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